Personal relationships with an intelligent interactive telephone health behavior advisor system: a multimethod study using surveys and ethnographic interviews

The burgeoning of consumer health informatics and virtual health care can help people improve their health. However, little is known about individuals' reactions to such systems. We conducted an evaluation of the telephone-linked care (TLC) system, a computer-based telecommunications system, that functions as an at home monitor, educator, and counselor for patients with chronic health conditions. Our multimethod assessment of individuals' reactions to using TLC included both quantitative and qualitative methods. Ethnographic in-depth open-ended interviews indicated more subtle and surprising reactions to TLC than the overall positive responses from surveys: individuals formed personal relationships with this technology. This relationship formation suggests that TLC designers may have been successful in their attempts to emulate a conversation with a human being. Our study adds to evidence that technology can serve as a projective device for peoples' values and psychological issues. Both designers and users project values and goals onto computer-based technologies and take on different identities through it. Different groups of users, therefore, may see the same technology differently. People also form relationships with technologies, as they did with TLC. These findings, as well as implications for system design and health outcomes, need to be explored in additional studies.

[1]  Allen C. Smith,et al.  Design and Conduct of Subjectivist Studies , 1997 .

[2]  T Heeren,et al.  An automated telephone system for monitoring the functional status of community-residing elders. , 1999, The Gerontologist.

[3]  Alison Cawsey,et al.  Personalized and adaptive systems for medical consumer applications , 2002, CACM.

[4]  Warner V. Slack Cybermedicine: How Computing Empowers Doctors and Patients for Better Health Care , 1997 .

[5]  S. Schneider,et al.  Computerized, telephone-based stress management program. , 1993, Proceedings. Symposium on Computer Applications in Medical Care.

[6]  Bonnie Kaplan,et al.  An analytical framework for measuring the effectiveness/impacts of computer-based patient record systems , 1995, Proceedings of the Twenty-Eighth Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences.

[7]  Charles P. Friedman,et al.  Evaluation Methods in Medical Informatics , 1997, Computers and Medicine.

[8]  R. Glasgow,et al.  Interactive technology applications for behavioral counseling: issues and opportunities for health care settings. , 1999, American journal of preventive medicine.

[9]  C. Aydin,et al.  Evaluating Health Care Information Systems: Methods and Applications , 1993 .

[10]  Henry J. Lowe,et al.  Review: The World Wide Web: A Review of an Emerging Internet-based Technology for the Distribution of Biomedical Information , 1996, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[11]  V. Leirer,et al.  Automated Telephone Reminders in Tuberculosis Care , 1994, Medical care.

[12]  Bonnie Kaplan,et al.  White Paper: Consumer Informatics Supporting Patients as Co-Producers of Quality , 2001, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[13]  J. Piette,et al.  The Feasibility of Automated Voice Messaging as an Adjunct to Diabetes Outpatient Care , 1997, Diabetes Care.

[14]  N Maglaveras,et al.  Patient Acceptance of Educational Voice Messages: A Review of Controlled Clinical Studies , 2002, Methods of Information in Medicine.

[15]  J. Prochaska,et al.  Systems of Psychotherapy: A Transtheoretical Analysis , 1979 .

[16]  J. Piette,et al.  Patient education via automated calls: a study of English and Spanish speakers with diabetes. , 1999, American journal of preventive medicine.

[17]  Bonnie Kaplan THE COMPUTER AS RORSCHACH: Implications for Management and User Acceptance , 1983 .

[18]  Bonnie Kaplan,et al.  Evaluating informatics applications - clinical decision support systems literature review , 2001, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[19]  T. Massaro Introducing physician order entry at a major academic medical center: I. Impact on organizational culture and behavior. , 1993 .

[20]  Bonnie Kaplan,et al.  Review: Addressing Organizational Issues into the Evaluation of Medical Systems , 1997, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[21]  John E. Stollerman,et al.  A telecommunications system for monitoring and counseling patients with hypertension. Impact on medication adherence and blood pressure control. , 1996, American journal of hypertension.

[22]  Robert Friedman,et al.  Effects of a computer-based, telephone-counseling system on physical activity. , 2002, American journal of preventive medicine.

[23]  Bonnie Kaplan,et al.  Participant reactions to a computerized telephone system for nutrition and exercise counseling. , 2003, Patient education and counseling.

[24]  S. Yusuf,et al.  Overview of Randomized Trials of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors on Mortality and Morbidity in Patients With Heart Failure , 1995 .

[25]  A. Strauss,et al.  The discovery of grounded theory: strategies for qualitative research aldine de gruyter , 1968 .

[26]  J. Piette,et al.  Use of automated telephone disease management calls in an ethnically diverse sample of low-income patients with diabetes. , 1999, Diabetes care.

[27]  Arkalgud Ramaprasad,et al.  Technology-based marketing in the healthcare industry: implications for relationships between players in the industry , 2000 .

[28]  Sherry Turkle,et al.  The second self: computers and the human spirit , 1984 .

[29]  A. McCray,et al.  Yearbook of Medical Informatics , 2013, Yearbook of Medical Informatics.

[30]  Lauren B. Eder,et al.  Managing Healthcare Information Systems with Web-Enabled Technologies , 1999 .

[31]  M. Lynne Markus,et al.  Power, politics, and MIS implementation , 1987, CACM.

[32]  Robert Lawrence Kuhn Frontiers of Medical Information Sciences , 1988 .

[33]  K. Swedberg,et al.  Beneficial effects of metoprolol in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy , 1993, The Lancet.

[34]  R. Friedman Automated Telephone Conversations to Assess Health Behavior and Deliver Behavioral Interventions , 1998, Journal of Medical Systems.

[35]  S. Barley Technology as an occasion for structuring: evidence from observations of CT scanners and the social order of radiology departments. , 1986, Administrative science quarterly.

[36]  F Alemi,et al.  Reaction to “Talking” Computers Assessing Health Risks , 1995, Medical care.

[37]  F Alemi,et al.  Educating patients at home. Community Health Rap. , 1996, Medical care.

[38]  Robert H. Friedman,et al.  Synthesis of Research: The Virtual Visit: Using Telecommunications Technology to Take Care of Patients , 1997, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[39]  M W Gillman,et al.  Randomized Trial of a “Talking Computer” to Improve Adults' Eating Habits , 2001, American journal of health promotion : AJHP.

[40]  Robert H. Friedman,et al.  A Telecommunications System to Manage Patients with Chronic Disease , 1998, MedInfo.

[41]  Williams Ls Microchips versus stethoscopes: Calgary hospital, MDs face off over controversial computer system. , 1992 .

[42]  F Alemi,et al.  Automated Monitoring of Outcomes , 1994, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[43]  Bonnie Kaplan,et al.  Combining Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in Information Systems Research: A Case Study , 1988, MIS Q..

[44]  A. Strauss,et al.  Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures and techniques. , 1992 .

[45]  F Alemi,et al.  Computer reminders improve on-time immunization rates. , 1996, Medical care.

[46]  T Heeren,et al.  Older women and physical activity: using the telephone to walk. , 1997, Women's health issues : official publication of the Jacobs Institute of Women's Health.

[47]  S. Turkle Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet , 1997 .

[48]  E S Metcalfe,et al.  An Internet primer: resources and responsibilities , 1994, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[49]  D E Forsythe,et al.  New bottles, old wine: hidden cultural assumptions in a computerized explanation system for migraine sufferers. , 1996, Medical anthropology quarterly.

[50]  R. Friedman,et al.  An automated telephone-based smoking cessation education and counseling system. , 1999, Patient education and counseling.

[51]  V. Leirer,et al.  Use of automated reminders for tuberculin skin test return. , 1997, American journal of preventive medicine.

[52]  Bonnie Kaplan,et al.  Evaluating informatics applications - some alternative approaches: theory, social interactionism, and call for methodological pluralism , 2001, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[53]  F Alemi,et al.  A randomized trial of a telecommunications network for pregnant women who use cocaine. , 1996, Medical care.

[54]  B Kaplan,et al.  People, Organizational, and Social Issues: Evaluation as an exemplar , 2002, Yearbook of Medical Informatics.

[55]  B. Kaplan The Computer Prescription: Medical Computing, Public Policy, and Views of History , 1995 .

[56]  B. Kaplan,et al.  Objectification and negotiation in interpreting clinical images: implications for computer-based patient records , 1995, Artif. Intell. Medicine.

[57]  D. Gustafson,et al.  Impact of a patient-centered, computer-based health information/support system. , 1999, American journal of preventive medicine.